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{{infoboxinfobox1
|title=The Norm Chronicles: Stories and numbers about danger
|sort=Norm Chronicles: Stories and numbers about danger
|date=June 2013
|isbn=978-1846686207
|website=http://thenormchronicles.com|videocover=1846686202|amazonukaznuk=<amazonuk>1846686202</amazonuk>|amazonusaznus=<amazonus>1846686202</amazonus>
}}
I've long thought that if you are an avid reader of certain tabloid newspapers with their ''Under-age Sex With Asylum Seekers Causes Cancer of the Housing Market'' approach you probably find that life is best lived in a small room in the middle of your home. ''The Norm Chronicles'' is the perfect antidote, acknowledging the risk and giving the figures to put it in context. Some are surprising - such as the risks from a whole body health scan compared to standing a mile and a half from the epicentre of the Hiroshima atomic bomb. In terms of radiation it's about the same. I was fascinated too by the statistics with regard to the dangers of rail travel - you're definitely better being on the inside of one looking out rather than the other way round.
Picking examples is difficult as this really is cradle to grave coverage with a look at every aspect of life in between. I've always leaned towards the logical approach to evaluating risk rather than believing what makes a good story in the media, so this was meat and drink to me (sausages are ore more of a problem than I thought and wine is less). There was just one chapter - on chance - which went a little above my head (but my husband hoovered it up with enthusiasm - it's a matter of what you're interested in) but the rest of the book is perfectly pitched and if not completely free from jargon, the concepts are explained clearly and in terms which the layman can understand. Blastland and Spiegelhalter are masters of creating the mental image which explains a concept perfectly.
I'm no stranger to Michael Blastland's writing and I knew exactly what I was expecting. I wasn't disappointed. What I ''wasn't'' expecting was that there would be moments which were laugh-out-loud funny and that the book would be written with wit and elegance. Don't feel that it's a book to sit down and read through - it's one to take in stages as there is ''a lot'' of information to assimilate - but it was a pleasure to read and I'd like to thank the publishers for sending a copy to the Bookbag.
If this book appeals then we're sure that you'll also enjoy [[The Tiger that Isn't by Michael Blastland and Andrew Dilnot]].
{{amazontext|amazon=1846686202}} {{waterstonestextamazonUStext|waterstonesamazon=93981541846686202}}
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[[Category:Michael Blastland]]
[[Category:David Spiegelhalter]]
[[Category:Lifestyle]][[Category:Popular Science|Norm Chronicles: Stories and numbers about danger]]